Emergence of a neutrino flux above 5 PeV and implications for ultrahigh energy cosmic rays
The rare detections of astrophysical neutrinos with energies above 5~PeV by two neutrino telescopes underscore the existence of a flux at these energies. In addition to over a decade of data taken by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory, the KM3NeT neutrino telescope has recently highlighted their disco...
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Zusammenfassung: | The rare detections of astrophysical neutrinos with energies above 5~PeV by
two neutrino telescopes underscore the existence of a flux at these energies.
In addition to over a decade of data taken by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory,
the KM3NeT neutrino telescope has recently highlighted their discovery of a
possible $\mathcal{O}(100~PeV)$ neutrino candidate. A connection between the
highest-energy astrophysical neutrinos and the highest-energy cosmic rays is
expected, and well-established theoretically. Here, for the first time, we
simultaneously fit the neutrino data from IceCube and KM3NeT, as well as the
ultrahigh-energy cosmic ray spectrum and composition data from the Pierre Auger
Observatory (Auger), to test a common-origin hypothesis. We show that a
phenomenological model is able to describe the combined data across these three
observatories, and, depending on the true energy of the event detected by
KM3NeT, suggests an additional cosmic ray source population not yet robustly
detected by Auger. Although a measurement of the neutrino flux in this energy
regime is at the sensitivity limit of cubic-kilometer-scale neutrino
telescopes, next-generation observatories, such IceCube-Gen2, will have the
sensitivity to make a significant detection of this flux. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2502.06944 |